Litcius/Paper detail

How Does Incarceration Affect Reoffending? Estimating the Dose-Response Function

Evan K. Rose, Yotam Shem-Tov

2021Journal of Political Economy73 citationsDOI

Abstract

We study the causal effect of incarceration on reoffending using discontinuities in North Carolina’s sentencing guidelines. A regression discontinuity analysis shows that 1 year of incarceration causes a reduction in the likelihood of being reincarcerated within 3, 5, and 8 years from sentencing by 44%, 29%, and 21%, respectively. To parse the potentially heterogeneous dose response relationship underlying these effects, we develop an econometric model of prison sentences and recidivism. We find that incarceration has meaningful reoffending-reducing average effects that diminish in incarceration length. As a result, budget-neutral reductions in sentence length combined with increases in incarceration rates can decrease recidivism.

Topics & Concepts

RecidivismRegression discontinuity designPrisonSentenceAffect (linguistics)EconometricsPsychologyDemographic economicsCriminologyEconomicsStatisticsComputer scienceMathematicsArtificial intelligenceCommunicationAdvanced Causal Inference TechniquesCriminal Justice and Corrections AnalysisHealthcare Policy and Management